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Does Coal Cost the West Virginia State Budget More Money Than it Makes?

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Thursday, June 24, 2010   

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - A new report that says the coal industry costs the West Virginia state budget a $100 million a year is sparking debate in Charleston.

Rory McIlmoil helped write the report for Downstream Strategies, and he says they found the state spends about $100 million more per year on coal companies and workers than it gets in taxes and revenue.

"The costs associated directly and indirectly with coal industry activity outweigh the economic benefits for the state budget. We estimated a net cost to the state of $97.5 million."

An industry group says the report left out some of the revenue created by coal.

Bill Raney, president of the West Virginia Coal Association, says the study did not include local property taxes or the indirect impact when miners spend their wages.

"Property taxes are paid to the county, payroll itself for the industry runs somewhere between $1.5 billion and $2 billion, and there's the economic multiplier that it brings to the economy of the state."

But McIlmoil says they carefully accounted for the wage multiplier. He adds that one key finding about those indirect multiplier effects is that they are not that strong in the state.

"The indirect employment supported by the coal industry is not high-wage employment. We found that the average wage of indirect employment was only approximately $33,500 per worker."

He says local property taxes will be in a county-by-county report now being researched.





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